Well, it's a very hypnotizing piece. Very interesting...
About your playing- you play this piece very well. Keeping the exact tempo for so long is hard, and you do it almost perfectly!
I'm interested, which other pieces do you play?
Tom.
My recital from 12 days ago:
Beethoven - Sonata in F-sharp major, Op. 78
Scarlatti - two sonatas, one in B-flat and one in G minor, I don't know the #s offhand
Tajcevic - Seven Balkan Dances
Liszt - Sposalizio
Schubert/Liszt - Der Doppelganger
Chopin - Scherzo in B-flat Minor
Of Philip Glass, I also play "Opening" from "Glassworks," "Etude #1" from "Etudes for Piano," and I'm learning the "Trilogy Sonata," which is a set of three piano arrangements of pieces from his opera trilogy.
I like transcriptions and arrangements, and am working on a new arrangement of Berlioz's Symphonie fantastique (much easier than Liszt's, to play for fun.)
I don't have great technique (but I'm working on it!) so a lot of great repertoire is closed to me for now. If a new law went out saying pianists could only learn 3 pieces of music and not be able to play any others, I'd go for Berg Sonata op. 1, Liszt Sonata in B minor, and Bach's Goldberg Variations.
...a rather big project of mine is arranging/recording a lot of Nintendo music on piano, but that doesn't seem suitable for this board.